New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 22, 1916, Page 6

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o EW i AVOIDS Medicine Which Made Sur- geon’s Work Unnecessary. Astoria, N. Y. — “For two years was feeli 3 tonics. I was ing worse every 1 had chills,my head | would ache, I w: always tired. I could | not walk straight because of the pain | in myback and I had pains in my stom- I went to a doctor and he said 1 go under an operation, but J. did I read in paper about ach. mus not go. . the Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and told my husband about it. I said ‘I know nothing will help me but I will try this.” I found myself improv- ing from the very first bottle, and in two weeks time I was able to sit down and eat a hearty breakfast with my hus- band, which [ had not done for two years. 1 am now in the best of health and :';ld noz Il(mvc the operation.”” — Mrs. OHN A. KOENIG, 502 Flushin; )i Astoria, N. Y. i Every one dreads the surgeon’s knife end the operating table. Sometimes rothing else will do; but many times doctors say they are necessary when thetfi are not. Letter after letter comes to the Pinkham Laboratory, telling how operations were advised and were not Eerformpd-or,if erformed,did no good, ut Lydia £ Pinkham'’s Vegetablo Goni poundwas used and good health followed. If you want advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, {confidential), Lynn, Mass, " = ng ill and took ail kinds of | ot~ | WANTS EUGENIGS TAUGHY 10 GIRLS French Scientist Would Make It Compulsory Study in Schools of the Press) —*“French Associated families (Correspondence Pari Nov. could be as large country, not ex Professor A, as those of any epting Germany,” said Pinard of the with The Profe the past two years to the care of ‘‘war babies” is one of France's most emi- nent physicians and, perhaps the best authority on the physiology of repop- ulation.. He declares that the trouble with the birth rate of France is a vol- | untary resistance witH economic rea- sons at the bottom of it. The state must get at those reasons, | ciated Press. sor Pinard, who has devoted priate legislation while the individual must learn more concerning what ¢ makes a numerous and physically | perior population. Eugenics he re- | gards as certain to have an enormous influence on the future of the human su- French | Academy of Medicine in an interview | he says, and overcome them by appro- | race, while a theory of his own #at | he has named Eugennetique, will fa- | cilitate the practical application of | eugenics, He is now appealing to par- liament to enfarce the application of / his doctrine by obligatory education of the future mother while she is still a | schoolgirl. Puericulture, as he calls | it—or moral and physical education | | combined—he wants taught as cur- rently as reading, writing and arith- SAVE YOUR HAIR'! 25 CENT BOTTLE STOPS DANDRUFF very Bit of Dandruff Disappears and Hair Stops Coming Out. This! Your Hair Appears Glossy, Abundant, Wavy and Beautiful. frry Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy air is mute evidence of a neglected alp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There is nothing so destructive to he hair as dandruff. It robs the hair it its lustre, its strength and its very ife; eventually producing a feverish- ess and itching of the scalp, which ff not remedied causes the hair roots o shrink, loosen and die—then the bair falls out fast. A little Dander- tonight—now—any time—will ave your hair. 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s anderine from any drug store or silet counter, and after the first ap- Jication your hair will take on that fe, lustre and luxuriance which is so leautiful. It will become wavy and 'y and have the appearance bundance, an incomparable gloss and lc ftness; but what will please ost will be after just a few weeks' se, when you will actually see a t of fine, downy hair—new hair— owing all over the scalp. Danderine is to the hair what fresh | owers of rain and sunshine are to egetation. It goes right to the roots, vigorates and strengthens them. s exhilarating and roperties cause the hair ng, strong and beautiful. to grow YOUR NECKWEAR ALWAYS. AT Wilson's of | you | life-producing | metic. “Blind reproduction must disap- pear,” was the professor’s comment | on eugenics. “In our country the fu-, ture mother is not from any point of view placed on an equal footing \\'ith‘ a throughbred brood-mare. “We have laws for the protection of both animals and children after birth —the child alone lacks protection be- | before hirth, and the result is such as | shown by the statistics of the Baude- locque clinic; out of 10,000 children that left the clinic alive, 5,397 were prematurely born, “Legislators look upon my proposi- tion as revolutionary—even immoral. I am not afraid of their appreciations for I am a Frenchman first, then a| | ‘puericulteur.” To render the father- ‘land more powerful, to preserve and | imprave the human species and tight- | en family ties are ambitions that are moral enough for me, even if they are revolutionary, Sturdy Babies Today, “Never before were there born in Paris such strong and handsome ba- bies as during this war,”” Professor Pi- | nard declared. “They are a striking | example of what may be accomplished | by better care of mothers and their | affspring—the result of a spontaneous ! effort from every direction to do | something for France, for the defend- | ers of France, and for the wives and | children of the soldiers left at home without protection. At the bureau of | vital statistics, upon the declaration of i the birth of a child, every mother was | sought out and if she needed assist- | ance, she got it, while mothers were prevailed upon more than ever before to nurse their own children; in conse- | quence the ‘war generation’ will be a ruged ore. “Large families are not found! among the thoughtful and prudent,” | Professor Pinard points out as proof | that restriction of births is the result | of Teflection. “They are only among ' | those Whose circumstances permit} i ICH in those ele- ments that build strong, vigorous little bodies, N.B.C.Graham Crackers are a splendid food for children. And youngsters love their nutty, oven-fresh flavor. Crisp and thin, N. B. C. Graham Crackers of themselves are most appetizing. 'NATIONAL BISCUrT COMPANY them to neglect prudence, or among those Who do not think, who live from day to day, from hand to mouth, and never worry about the future. Pru- dence—embracing economy—a native quality in the French character, car- ried to excess, is, if not the only cause the most potent influence in thé re- riction of births. “France of late years has been oc- cupied in saving and spending; new social laws have continually increased public expenditures and added to the family man’s taxes, until just before the war the budget amounted to 125 francs (25 dollars) a head for every inhabitant, Family Man Taxed. “The man with a large family is more heavily taxed under our system than the childless couple or the bach- i elor, many of whom escape taxation altogether. The cost of raising a fam- ily went up continually, while the heads of families did not derive from these social laws the profit that was promised to offset the disadvantages. | “The possibility of remedying the situation by legislation has already been proven,” said Dr. Pinard, who urges the adoption of the law propos- ed by Monsieur Benazet, deputy of the indre. “The law of 1813 that dis- pensed young married men from mili- tary service resulted in an Increase of 12 per cent, in births in two years. “The regretted General Gallieni, who realized the danger and was a man of action, succeeded by mere ad- ministrative measures in obtaining a like Tesult in Madagascar when he was governor general of that colony. In 1900 there were 38 births jer 1,000 inhabitants there: they rose to 45 in 1901, to 47 in 1902 and to 51 in 1903. Parliamentary action on such ques- tions is slow; it required some mo- mentous event such as the present war to stir every mind to the necessity of action. ““The bringing up of children in public institutions is a failure” Profes- sor Pinard declares. ‘“France will people itself only through the fami That systems which separate the mother from her offspring are defect- ive, is proven by the report of Dr. Drouineau on 200,000 children con- fided to the ‘Assistance Publique’ of whom only a third were brought to manhood. “Instead of substituting itself for | | Girl Runs Afi ILLION STOMACH SUFFERERS EAT BIG MEALS NOW ‘o fear of indigestion, gas, sourness, heartburn or acid- ity. Pape’s Diapepsin” is quickest, est stomach regulator known. Hvery vear regularly more than a illion stomach sufferers in the Unit. i States, England and Canada tak bpe’s Diapensin and realize not only hmediate but lasting relief. This harmless preparation will di st anything you eat and overcome a or out-of-order stomach ur, gassy e minutes afterwards. If your meals don't fit comfortably, what you eat lays like a lump o hd in your stomach, or if you havi artburn, that is a sign of indiges pn. Get from your pharmacist a 50-cen se of Pape's Diapepsin and eat of these soon as you can. There will b sings, no belching of undi food mixed with acid, n bmach gas or heartburn, no full s or heavy feeling in the stomach, | headaches, nausea. debilitating ziness or intestinal griping. Thi 11 all go, and des, there will b sour food left over in the stom to poison your breath with nau bus odors, [Pape’s Diapepsin prmptly t-of-order stomachs, because utralizes the acids in the stomac d digests your food just the sam if your stomach wasn’t there. Relief in five minutes from pmach misery v drug store. here large 50 cent re thon sufficient to thorou ercome any case of dyvspepsia, gestion or any other stomach 'er.[ regulate: a cases in di sur- candy-like tablets just it s waiting for you at contain | e 4 I 5 Niss BERYL SMITHSON- ; b ED ROUTE TO WORK, 558 L ACS e "ON THE JoB™" - Here's the e elevator operator de o runs the “lift” in a Seattle (Wash.) office building and who goes to her daily work in her own automobile. s | The pictures show Miss Beryl Smith- e four rubber tired wheels and the one | in which she earns the money which s first; also, she saved the money to buy h | the auto, every penny of it. e | Miss Smithson is employed and their 1| ful, courteous and expert elevator con- duetor. In an interview recently said she doesn’t think it is so te { remarkable for a working girl to save { it and thus get a lot of useful, health- ful pleasure out of life. Elevator; Goes 1o Work in Own Auto luxe, a young and attractive girl who | son in her two machines, the one with | goes to pay the cost of running the | The ten- | ants of the office building in which ' Visitors say she is a pleasant, thought- | | her money and buy an auto and run | | Neither the mother, charity—or common jus- tice—must enable the mother to raise her own child vroperly.” GERMAN WOMEN WORKERS. Number Now in Industrial Pursuits Nearly Equals Men. Berlin, Nov. 22.—According to the official municipal insurance bureaus, the number of women now employed | industrially has advanced to 47.5 per cent. of all workers, as against 2.6 | per cent. a little over thirty years ago. It rose from 24.5 per cent. in 1907, an average year, to 36.3 in 1914, to 42.2 in 1915, and to 47.5 in 1916. \ Mr. Dr. L. B. Jamison, at 718 West 178th street, where she collapsed- Two bul- lets had penetrated her chest. Funk ran to the house from which | Mrs. Mann had come. Already a cu- | rious group had gathered at her | door. Some one could be heard mut- | tering inside. The patrolman drew | his revolver and forced the door with | | on stood in the hallway of the apartment, facing the patrolman. His right hand held a revolver un- steadily in the general direction of the door. Funk levelled his own | weapon. At that instant the electri- | cian sank slowly to the floor. His body almost covered the picture of | Mann. He had shot himself through the head. Admits Shcoting Woman. During an interval of consciousness a policeman questioned him at Wash- ington Heights hospital. “I shot her,” he whispered. refused to marry me.”’ Mrs. Mann was the editor’s second wife, marrying him on January §, 1887. She was Miss Emma C. Lind- strom, of Providence. Her husband, a Scotchman, was seven years old when he died. He was on the edi- torial staffs of “The Sun,” “The Press” and “The Providence Journal” and was editor in chief of “The Provi- dence Telegram.” He was COTTespon- dent for “The Brooklyn Eagle” dur- ing the Spanish war. He was also an editor of several magazines, in- | cluding “Home and Country,” “She e S Buesi cess” and “Columbian Magazine,” and wrote several book: Mrs. Mann’s daughter-in-law, Mrs. Olaf Mann, who lives at 567 West 186th street, arrived at the apartment on VVJS( 178th street just after the | patrolman had burst in the door. She | had come to call on Mrs. Mann. Her husband said that Henrickson had lost his position as foreman recently and was dépressed on that account, as | well as because of Mrs. Mann's re- | Jection. Another son of Henry lery W. Mann, lives at avenue, Brooklyn- Mann, El- | 708 Ocean | Paz'n § ‘Whereas the number of. women now at work almost exactly equals the number of men, in some industries female help far outweighs numerical- ly male help. This is especially the case in the textile and the paper in- dustries, though the excess of women employed seems in no manner to have lessened the number of women who are now offering their services. SLAIN BY SUITOR Mrs. Mann Refused to Become Wife of 0Id Friend New York, Nov. 22.—M Mann, whose husband was the late Henry Mann, editor, author and sol- dier, was shot and probably fatally wounded at 5:30 yesterday afternoon by a man whom she had refused to marry. Alfred Henrickson, who ad- mitted that he shot her because his suit was rejected, is dying from self inflicted wounds in a room near her in Washington Heights hospital. Il is a prisoner. Near Henrickson's form, in th« hallway of Mrs. Mann’s apartment at 709 West 178th street. lay a pic ture of Henry Mann, mounted wit}h numerous newspaper clippings relat- ing to his activities. The glass cov- ering was shattered as if the picture had been plucked from the wall and a heel driven into it. For four years Henrickson, an electrician, who has a room at 530 West 174th street, has been on friend- ly terms with Mrs. Mann. They were the same age—fifty-one—and of the same nationality—Swedish. When Mr. Mann, who had served in the Civil war and Indian campaigns and on the editorial staffs of several news- papers and magazines, died, on Octo- | ber 15, 1915. FHenrickson visits be- came more frequent Richard H. vounger son ,nor her foster- daughter, Mabel Miller, who lived with her. suspected that anything more ardent than friendship and sym- pathy inspired the electrician’s calls. Last week, however, Mrs. Mann ap- parently astonished, told them that he wished to marry ner and that she had refused. Makes Vaguc Threat. | s Miller on Monday night, when Henricksonwas leaving the apartment. overheard him make a vague threat which was aimed apparently at the life of Mrs. Mann. Beyond momen- j tary surprise that the man whom she had regarded always as aged should show such fiery resentment at the repetition of his refusal, the young woman paid no attention to his re- mark. She went to work cording to her custom, Mann. As usual, Mrs. Mann was alone in the apartment, which is on the first floor- No one in the house saw Henrickson enter. About 5:30 the sound of two re- volver shots aroused tenants of ad- joining apartments. Mrs. Mann, clutching at her breast, staggered from her door and down the steps to the street. Patrolman Funk, of the West 177th street station, was standing near the house and ran to She shook him off. ! he gasped. , she gained the office of nma C. Mann, Mr Mann’s vesterday, ac- s did Richard | When a d is hurt, mother rubs | the spot. This is one of the principles of cure. Rubbing is an effective method of eas- ing pain. Many sufferxy from lumbago, stiffness, lameness, backache, sci: atica and all rheumatic pains when by rubbing | with Minard’s Liniment almost instant relief is at hand and with this delightful, creamy lini= ment, pain of every kind is sure to go’ « Physicians have recommended and druggists advised that the always de pendable Minard’s Liniment be kep! in every home ready for instant us,es 000 Every Night For Constipation Headache Indigestion,etc: @ RANDRETH e Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast Says we can't look or feel right | with the system full of polsons. folks of Millions of bathe now instead with drugs. internally form miracies if you could believe these hot water erthusiasts. There are vast numbers of mcn and women who, immediately upon arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. 1t kidneys and the thirty t testines of the previous day's wa sour bile and indigestible left over in the body which if not | eliminated every day, become food for the millions of bacteria which in- fest the bLowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the Diood causing headache, bilious attacks, foul breath bad taste, cold stomach trouble, | kidney misery, sleeplessness, impure | blooa and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can | not get feeling right are urged to | obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This | will cost very little but is sufficient | to make anyone a real crank on fhe | subject of internal sanitation. r Just as scap and hot water act on | the skin, cleansing, sweetening and | freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more important to bathe on the inside than on the outside, be- cause the skin pores do not absorb fmpuities into the blood, while the blood, while the bowel pores do. Ack For—Get The Original Nourishing DO:Iidolu Digestible Safe Mill 3E%-psey For Infants, Invallds'and Growing Childran, The Original Food-Drink For All Ages. “Rich Nilk, Maited Grain Extr Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price. loading their system | “What's an inside bath?” | you say. Well, it i3 guaranteed to per- | BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1916. The Household Remedy for the ailments from which almost everyone sometimes suffers—sick headache. constipation, disturbed sleep, muddy complexion, lassitude, backache, depression an: other results of a disordered digestive system—is BEECHAMS PILLS They have achievad the distinction of being the mos'f: widely used medicine in the world, because millions o people have found them dependable, speedy and sure in their action on stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Compounded from vegetable products, Beecham’s Pills are free from harmful minerals and dangerous drugs. They do not promote the physicing habit—do not irritate the bowels. Should be taken by every member of the family at the first sign of illness—so mild and effective that they are good for the aged, and for the ills of childhood, are Safe for Children Directions of Special Value tn Women with Every Box. Sold by druggists throughout the world. In boxes, 10c, 25¢c. is more than Shoe Polish It is composed of wax and oils so combined as to give a brilliant, lasting shine and to soften and preserve the leather. THE SumvotA HOME SET The handiest, most efficient shoe shining set you can buy at any price. Sold at a nominal cost to SumorA users. FOR HOME, GRIP OR AUTOMOBILE BLACK—TAN—WHITE m At all Dealers—Take no substitute it I Barbour Rug and Drapery Co. | Opposite ‘Allyn House Hariford, Gonn. {DOMESTIC RUGS i All Sizes and Colorings We are showing a wonderful collection of Wil- tons, Axminsters and Scotch Art Rugs—at very rea- sonable prices. Visit our Oriental Rug Gallery, at 48 Lewis St., and select a useful wedding or Christmas present from our splendid stock of small and large Oriental ugs. | N T T P T SO I T BT T DA % AUTO TIRES--BIG SALE s ———————— R — ‘We have just received $25,000 worth of all standard makes, fac- tory seconds, fresh and every one carries our regular guarantee of 3,500 miles. ACT QUICKLY as the good sizes are limited. These are just the things to finish the season with, ; Send Check, Money Order or Registered Letter and Your Or- der Will Be Filled the Same Day as Received. size Plain Non-skid 30x3 $ 6.90 30x314 8.90 : 31x31% 9.30 8 32x314 34x414 31x4 14.00 14.65 14.95 13.90 14.20 14.76 15.00 19.00 19.75 20.06 23.65 OUR MOTTO:—Money refunded if UNITED CYCLE CO. UNITED TIRE CO. you are not satisfied. 1108 MAIN STREET HARTFORD, CONN. 688 CHAPEL STRE NEW HAVEN, CONN. THE HERALD HE Iatest news from all parts of the world, KEEP INFORMED READ THE HERALD T state and city to the time of going to press each day, Special telegraph wire. Full As- —_— Dellvered fo Any Part sociated Press servica and large corps of efficient reporters, g : ! of the Gity By Carrier for 15 Cents a Week : . :

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